Title: The Teaching Act
1The Teaching Act
- An Outline Of Direct Instruction
2Experience Learning
- We Tend To Remember
- 10 of what we read
- 20 of what we hear
- 30 of what we see
- 50 of what we hear see
- 70 of what we say
- 90 of what we say do
3Outline
- Objectives
- Standards
- Anticipatory Set
- Teaching
- Input
- Modeling
- Check For Understanding
- Guided Practice/Monitoring
- Closure
- Independent Practice
41. Teaching Objectives
- Teacher should ask their self
- What should the student be able to
- Do
- Understand, and/or
- Care about as a result of the teaching?
52. Standards Of Performance
- The teacher needs to know what standards of
performance are to be expected and when pupils
will be held accountable for what is expected - Students should be informed about the standards
of performance.
62. Standards Of Performance
- Standards
- An explanation of
- The type of lesson to be presented
- Procedures to be followed
- Behavioral expectations related to the lesson
- What the students are expected to do
- What knowledge or skills are to be demonstrated
and in what manner
73. Anticipatory Set
- Sometimes called a "hook" to grab the student's
attention - Actions and statements to relate the experiences
of the students to the objectives of the lesson
to put students into a receptive frame of mind.
83. Anticipatory Set
- The purpose is to
- Focus student attention on the lesson
- Create an organized framework for the ideas,
principles, or information - Extend the understanding and the application of
abstract ideas through the use of example or
analogy
93. Anticipatory Set
- Example
- Topic Supply Demand
- 10th and 11th grade Econ class
- By a show of hands, how many of you care how
high the price of a Big Mac Cost - View the hands
- Today we are going to talk about some of the key
factors that determine the cost of things such as
Big Macs, cars, gas, and movie tickets
A question makes a good hook
Hopefully these things relate to the students
104. Teaching/Presentation
- Includes Input, Modeling, and Checking for
understanding - Input
- The teacher provides information needed for
students to gain the knowledge or skill through
diverse instructional delivery strategies - Lecture
- Demonstration
- Case studies and scenarios
- Etc
114. Teaching/Presentation
- Modeling
- The teacher models examples of what is expected
as an end product of their work - Students are taken to the application level
(problem-solving, comparison, summarizing, etc.)
In our Supply Demand lesson, the teacher may
review a case study and make predictions
124. Teaching/Presentation
- Checking for Understanding
- Determination of whether students have "got it"
before proceeding - Teacher must know that students understand before
proceeding to practice - If there is any doubt--the concept/skill should
be re-taught before practice begins
Requires constant monitoringasking questions,
reading non-verbal cues (i.e. facial
expressions), etc. . .
134. Teaching/Presentation
- Questioning strategies
- Asking questions that go beyond recall to probe
for the higher levels of understanding...to
ensure memory network binding and transfer - Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
provides a structure for questioning that is
hierarchical and cumulative and provides guidance
to the teacher in structuring questions at the
level of proximal development - Questions progress from the lowest to the highest
of the six levels of the cognitive domain of the
Taxonomy of Educational Objectives knowledge,
comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis,
and evaluation.
Most Teachers only asks questions at the
knowledge level!
144. Teaching/Presentation
To keep students from conditioning their selves
into not listening and asking for the question to
be repeated when called on
- Questioning Technique
- Get their attention, then ask the question
- Ask the question before designating the person to
answer (Do not look at the person you are going
to ask) - Do not repeat or rephrase the student's response.
You may ask for agreement by the class or others
to respond. Explain why the answer is good (offer
positive reinforcement)
154. Teaching/Presentation
- Ask the question then wait for 50 of hands or
"bright eyes," knowing looks. Do not be afraid
of a little quite space in time - Never ask a question of a student who you know
cannot answer. Never try to embarrass a student - If the student is confused or can not answer,
calmly repeat the same question or give a direct
clue. Try to lead the student to the correct
answer.
Some adolescents will never forgive you!
165. Guided Practice
- Opportunity for students to demonstrate grasp of
the new learning by working through an activity
or exercise under the teacher's direct
supervision - Teacher moves around the room to determine the
level of mastery and to provide individual
remediation as needed - (Offer positive reinforcement when possible)
176. Independent Practice
- Provide independent practice on a repeating
schedule so that the learning is not forgotten - Home work
- Group work
- Individual work in class
186. Independent Practice
- Should provide for decontextualization (enough
different contexts) so that the skill/concept may
be applied to any relevant situation...not only
the context in which it was originally learned - The failure to do this is responsible for most
student failure to be able to apply something
learned
197. Closure
- Actions or statements by a teacher that are
designed to bring a lesson to a conclusion - Used to help students bring things together in
their own minds and make sense out of what has
just been taught
207. Closure
- Closure is used
- To cue students to the fact that they have
arrived at an important point in the lesson or
the end of a lesson - To help organize student learning
- To help form a coherent picture, to consolidate,
eliminate confusion and frustration, etc. - To reinforce the major points to be learned...To
help establish the network of thought
relationships that provide a number of
possibilities for cues for retrieval
217. Closure
- The act of
- Reviewing and clarifying the key points of a
lesson - Tying them together into a coherent whole
- Ensuring their utility in application by securing
them in the student's conceptual network
22Numbers 6 7
- Sometimes Independent Practice will be
administered before closure - Class work
- Sometimes Independent Practice will be
administered after closure - Homework
23Summary
- You told them what you were going to tell them
with set - You tell them with presentation
- You demonstrate what you want them to do with
modeling - You see if they understand what you've told them
with checking for understanding, and - You tell them what you've told them by tying it
all together with closure